单选题下面的短文后列出了7个句子,请根据短文的内容对每个句子做出判断,如果该句提的是正确信息,
请选择A;如果该句提的是错误信息,请选择B;如果该句的信息句的信息文中没有提及,请选择C。
Why is the Native Language Learnt So
Well How does it happen that children learn their
mother tongue so well? When we compare them with adults learning a foreign
language, we often find this interesting fact. A little child without knowledge
or experience often succeeds in a complete mastery(精通) of the language. A
grown-up person with fully developed mental powers, in most case, may end up
with a faulty and inexact command(掌握). What accounts for this difference?
Despite other explanations, the real answer in my opinion lies
partly in the child himself, partly in the behavior of the people around him. In
the first place, the time of learning the mother tongue is the most favorable of
all, namely, the first years of life. A child hears it spoken from morning till
night and, what is more important, always in its genuine form, with the right
pronunciation, right intonation, right use of words and right structure. He
drinks in(吸收) all the words and expressions, which come to him in a flash,
ever-bubbling(冒泡的) spring. There is no resistance: there is perfect
assimilation. Then the child has, as it were, private lessons
all the year round, while an adult language-student has each week a limited
number of hours, which he generally shares with others. The child has another
advantage : he hears the language in all possible situations, always accompanied
by the right kind of gestures and facial expressions. Here there is nothing
unnatural, such as it is often found in language lessons in schools, when one
talks about ice and snow in June or scorching heat in January. And what a child
hears is generally what immediately interests him. Again and again, when his
attempts at speech are successful, his desires are understood and fulfilled.
Finally, though a child's "teachers" may not have been trained
in language teaching, their relations with him are always close and personal.
They take great pains to make their lessons easy.
单选题Would you bring me some {{U}}up-to-date{{/U}} catalogues?
单选题The firm of Bonnin and Morris in Philadelphia was probably the first American company to manufacture {{U}}porcelain{{/U}}
单选题Why is the Native Language Learnt So Well How does it happen that children learn their mother tongue so well? When we compare them with adults learning a foreign language, we often find this interesting fact. A little child without knowledge or experience often succeeds in a complete mastery of the language. A grown-up person with fully developed mental powers, in most case, may end up with a faulty and inexact command. What accounts for this difference? Despite other explanations, the real answer in my opinion lies partly in the child himself, partly in the behavior of the people around him. In the first place, the time of learning the mother tongue is the most favorable of all, namely, the first years of life. A child hears it spoken from morning till night and, what is more important, always in its genuine form, with the right pronunciation, right intonation, right use of words and right structure. He drinks in all the words and expressions, which come to him in a flash, ever- bubbling spring. There is no resistance: there is perfect assimilation. Then the child has, as it were, private lessons all the year round, while an adult language-student has each week a limited number of hours, which he generally shares with others. The child has another advantage: he hears the language in all possible situations, always accompanied by the right kind of gestures and facial expressions. Here there is nothing unnatural, such as is often found in language lessons in schools, when one talks about ice and snow in June or scorching heat in January. And what a child hears is generally what immediately interests him. Again and again, when his attempts at speech are successful, his desires are understood and fulfilled. Finally, though a child's "teachers" may not have been trained in language teaching, their relations with him are always close and personal. They take great pains to make their lessons easy.
单选题The conference explored the possibility of closer trade links.A. rejectedB. investigatedC. proposedD. postponed
单选题{{B}}第二篇{{/B}}
{{B}}
Late-night Drinking{{/B}} Coffee lovers beware.
Having a quick "pick-me-up" cup of coffee late in the day will play havoc with
your sleep. As well as being a stimulant, caffeine interrupts the flow of
melatonin, the brain hormone that sends people into a sleep.
Melatonin levels normally start to rise about two hours before bedtime.
Levels then peak between 2 am and 4 am, before falling again." It's the
neurohormone that controls our sleep and tells our body when to sleep and when
to wake," says Maurice Ohayon of the Stanford Sleep Epidemiology Research Center
at Stanford University in California. But researchers in Israel have found that
caffeinated coffee halves the body's levels of this sleep hormone.
Lotan Shilo and a team at the Sapir Medical Center in Tel Aviv University
found that six volunteers slept less well after a cup of caffeinated coffee than
after drinking the same amount of decal. On average, subjects slept 336 minutes
per night after drinking caffeinated coffee, compared with 415 minutes after
decaf. They also took half an hour to drop off - twice as long as usual - and
jigged around in bed twice as much. In the second phase of the
experiment, the researchers woke the volunteers every three hours and asked them
to give a urine sample. Shilo measured concentrations of a breakdown product of
melatonin. The results suggest that melatonin concentrations in caffeine
drinkers were half those in decaf drinkers. In a paper accepted for publication
in Sleep Medicine, the researchers suggest that caffeine blocks production of
the enzyme that drives melatonin production. Because it can take
many hours to eliminate caffeine from the body, Ohayon recommends that coffee
lovers switch to decal after lunch.
单选题Buyers like bigger portion because they think they have got___
单选题Adaptation of Living Things
Certain animals and plants develop characteristics that help them cope with their environment better than others of their kind. This natural biological process is called adaptation. Among the superior characteristics developed through adaptation are those that may help in getting food or shelter, in providing protection, and in producing and protecting the young. That results in the evolution of more and more organisms that are better fitted to their environments.
Each living thing is adapted to its way of life in a general way, but each is adapted especially to its own distinct class. A plant, for example, depends upon its roots to fix itself firmly and to absorb water and inorganic chemicals. It depends upon its green leaves for using the sun"s energy to make food from inorganic chemicals. These are general adaptations, common to most plants. In addition, there are special adaptations that only certain kinds of plants have.
Many animals have adaptations that help them escape from their enemies. Some insects are hidden by their body color or shape, and many look like a leaf or a little branch. The coats of deer are colored to mix with the surroundings. Many animals have the ability to remain completely still when an enemy is near.
Organisms have a great variety of ways of adapting. They may adapt in their structure, function, and genetics; in their development and production of the young; and in other respects. An organism may create its won environment, as do warm-blooded mammals, which have the ability to adjust body heat exactly to maintain their ideal temperature despite changing weather. Usually adaptations are an advantage, but sometimes an organism is so well adapted to a particular environment that, if conditions change, it finds it difficult or impossible to readapt to the new conditions.
单选题Illinois has produced writers such as Carl Sandburg,
gangsters
such as A1 Capone, and architects such as Louis Sullivan.
单选题Many tourists are attracted to the New England states by the autumn foliage. A.weather B.leaves C.festivals D.harvest
单选题It doesn't {{U}}stand to reason{{/U}} that he would lie.
单选题What were the {{U}}consequences{{/U}} of the decision she had made?
A. reasons
B. results
C. causes
D. bases
单选题In Britain people {{U}}use up{{/U}} four million tons of potatoes every
year.
A. swallow
B. dispose
C. consume
D. exhaust
单选题Their research merely {{U}}duplicates{{/U}} work already done elsewhere.
单选题The food is
inadequate
for ten people.
单选题It is laid down in the regulations that all members must carry their membership cards at all times. A. suggested B. warned C. stated D. confirmed
单选题The article (sketched) the major events of the decade.
单选题Not everyone can
perceive
the gradual change in the writer"s style.
单选题He needs the money really
badly
.
单选题I am feeling
a lot
more healthy than I was.